I think this is being worked on / discussed in the background for how to best implement this. There are a lot of complications when you get into the details of how it should work
In the meantime, another perspective is that even on centralized platforms there will be multiple communities for a particular theme. Especially at first, there may be a few communities for something before one of them will win out as THE community for it.
That's already happened here for a few communities, where there is ONE main community for a topic.
For others, it's still in the early stages or (like on Reddit) there are multiple concurrent communities for ideological reasons.
The exception would be if something is created or thought of on the platform, in which case there may only be one community for it from the start. For example, !taneggs@lemmy.ca was a fun idea that started here and has grown into a solid community now (thanks to @DaMonsterKnees@lemmy.world's regular posts π).
I'm not familiar with Komoot, can you share what features you're looking for?
If it's similar to what I'm thinking of, these two might be relevant on the selfhosted side
https://github.com/joaovitoriasilva/endurain
https://github.com/samr1/fittrackee
The second one might be getting social features?
For apps, I think this is what people recommended for hikes/trails
Thanks, I'll edit that in
I was looking into k-9 mail and it seemed decent
What stuff did you want to have in a mobile app?
The email servers themselves are separate (ex. Gmail, your school email server, work email server, etc.).
Thunderbird / K9 are clients that let you access the email on your device
So they should all be compatible with each other
We actually had a quick adjustment when we launched and immediately changed the name of the instance after the Pixelfed dev contacted us about the domain. You can see the pinned comment here: https://lemmy.ca/post/39411782
As for why both instances exist
We both launched around the same time. I think this is their launch post, which had it about a month before we launched https://cosocial.ca/@mwdawson/113839618312626769 By the time I learned about that instance, we already set up pixelfed.ca and were preparing to launch
I think there's an advantage to having more choices available to users. Also lemmy instance admins often help each other out, and I'm sure it'll be the same with pixelfed :)
Yes we do :)
You can find the community for it at !pixelfed@lemmy.ca and read the post about the launch on !main@lemmy.ca (edit: https://lemmy.ca/post/39411782 )
As for private accounts, my understanding is no. There is some discussion here: https://github.com/pixelfed/pixelfed/issues/1763
It is something that's being worked on, but I would advise holding off on posting anything that you want to keep truly private
Event: DEEP AGM and Presentation: Fire Awareness β Prevention Tips and Preparing a Household Response Plan
Patient gets to keep their canine then.
That's a good point. I remember seeing an article about tooth re-growing teeth (in ferrets), and while I don't remember if it was stem cells, that might be nicer than having to lose a tooth for an eye.
Do you know if tissue grown from a patientβs own stem cells is generally not rejected by the immune system
My background is a bit limited here, but looking around it seems that it's 'better' but not necessarily 'rejection proof'
HSCT came to mind first, but those are replicated inside the patient:
Hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) is the transplantation of multipotent hematopoietic stem cells [...] in order to replicate inside a patient and produce additional normal blood cells. HSCT may be autologous (the patient's own stem cells are used), syngeneic (stem cells from an identical twin), or allogeneic (stem cells from a donor)
Autologous transplants have the advantage of lower risk of infection during the immune-compromised portion of the treatment, since the recovery of immune function is rapid. Also, the incidence of patients experiencing rejection is very rare (and graft-versus-host disease impossible) due to the donor and recipient being the same individual
Induced pluripotent stem cells seem closer:
Since iPSCs can be derived directly from adult tissues, they not only bypass the need for embryos, but can be made in a patient-matched manner, which means that each individual could have their own pluripotent stem cell line. These unlimited supplies of autologous cells could be used to generate transplants without the risk of immune rejection. While the iPSC technology has not yet advanced to a stage where therapeutic transplants have been deemed safe, iPSCs are readily being used in personalized drug discovery efforts and understanding the patient-specific basis of disease.
This other article from 2013 lists a few concerns, and I think this is the closest to what you were looking for: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3931018/#sec3
Potential Causes of iPSC Immunogenicity
[...] The first potential cause is immaturity of cells differentiated from iPSCs in vitro. [...] There are a number of human cell types that, to date, can be differentiated only to immature phenotypes in vitro [...] . An immature phenotype poses two risks for immune response, the first being low MHC class I (MHC-I) expression. Natural killer (NK) cells target cells with low MHC-I levels, and although differentiation of iPSCs causes these levels to rise, they may not reach those of adult tissue. [...] Another risk of an immature phenotype is expression of embryonic or fetal proteins. These antigens may not have been present during immune system education to go through negative selection in the thymus, leaving them susceptible to T cell attack. T [...].
A second potential cause of iPSC immunogenicity is genetic and epigenetic changes that arise from reprogramming or adaptation to culture conditions. Recent studies have demonstrated that reprogramming to pluripotency is incomplete and that iPSCs carry an epigenetic memory of their tissue of origin that affects gene expression and can restrict differentiation potential (26β30). [...]
A third potential cause is culturing of iPSCs, or their differentiated progeny, with xenogeneic or non-physiological culture reagents. [...] hESCs take up the non-human sialic acid N-glycolylneuraminic acid (Neu5Gc) from mouse cell feeder layers and animal serum-containing culture media. This represents a risk because humans have circulating antibodies to Neu5Gc (37). Several groups have since developed xeno-free culture conditions for reprogramming and differentiation that reduce or eliminate Neu5Gc expression, although these methods are costly and can be technically challenging (38β40). [...]
[...]
A fun fact I came across on that wikipedia article:
Yamanaka named iPSCs with a lower case "i" due to the popularity of the iPod and other products.
Odd, I'll see if we can figure out what might be happening
Oh interesting, good to know
Someone here should grab it before we end up with a situation like that other subreddit (either the 'save 3rd party apps' one or 'reddit alternatives'?) where the mods were removing posts promoting Lemmy/fediverse
I read it more as asking why a USB-C went with an oval shape instead of a circle
I don't mind, but it might be good to leave some details out of titles for casting decisions
This crosspost from !daredevil@lemmy.world for example
https://sh.itjust.works/post/33599966
[potential spoilers] Daredevil Born Again Season 2 casting
{details of spoiler}
Also there's a 'Shaggy in the MCU' joke in here somewhere
Amazing find π the snowy fluff!
[test post] Canadian men's curling championship returns to Kelowna, B.C., for 1st time in decades
test
This is an old post, but I'm seeing the same issue @rikudou@lemmings.world
In my case it is self-hosted with docker, here is an example: https://lemmy.ca/post/39867153
Interestingly, sorting by new in the community only brings up one copy of the post, but both posts show up in the UI under 'crosspost', as well as in the user's post history: https://lemmy.ca/c/vancouver?dataType=Post&sort=New
One benefit we couldn't get from robots is the disease and medical knowledge we've gained from human space travel
https://www.asc-csa.gc.ca/eng/about/everyday-benefits-of-space-exploration/improving-health-care.asp
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9833174/
https://www.nasa.gov/missions/station/space-station-leads-to-breakthroughs-in-human-health-on-earth/
Some of these could have been done without space travel for sure, but it's hard to predict what we'll learn before we do things
For the 1st time in Canada, surgeons put teeth in patients' eyes to restore sight
Wealthsimple TLDR Newsletter | February 24, 2025: 'π΅οΈ We solved a crime'